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Transcript
THE SARS COMMISSION
Executive Summary
Spring of Fear
Volume 1
The Honourable Mr. Justice Archie Campbell
December 2006
ISBN 1-4249-2821-4
Table of Contents
VOLUME ONE
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Thirteen Essential Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Dedication
This report is dedicated to those who died from SARS,
those who suffered from it, those who fought the disease,
and all those affected by it.
Letter of Transmittal
COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE
THE INTRODUCTION AND
SPREAD OF SARS IN ONTARIO
The Honourable Archie Campbell
Commissioner
180 Dundas Street West, 22nd Floor
Toronto, ON M5G 1Z8
Tel:
(416) 212-6878
Fax:
(416) 212-6879
Website:
www.sarscommission.ca
December 11, 2006
The Honourable George Smitherman MPP
Minister of Health and Long-Term Care
10th Floor Hepburn Block
80 Grosvenor St.
Toronto, Ontario
M7A 2C4
Dear Mr. Minister:
Pursuant to the terms of reference, letter of appointment, and Order in Council
establishing the independent SARS Commission I submit the attached third and
final report.
Yours truly,
Archie Campbell
Commissioner
vii
Introduction
SARS was a tragedy. In the space of a few months, the deadly virus emerged from the
jungles of central China, killed 44 in Ontario and struck down more than 3301 others
with serious lung disease. It caused untold suffering to its victims and their families,
forced thousands into quarantine, brought the health system in the Greater Toronto
Area and other parts of the province to its knees and seriously impacted health
systems in other parts of the country.
Nurses lived daily with the fear that they would die or infect their families with a fatal
disease. The nine-year-old daughter of one nurse asked:
Mommy, are you going to die?
Respiratory technicians, doctors, hospital workers, paramedics and home care workers lived with the same fear.
1. For the purpose of this report, the Commission will use the number of SARS cases presented at its
public hearings by Dr. Colin D’Cunha on September 29, 2003: 247 probable cases and 128 suspect
cases for a total of 375. These numbers were also contained in the final version of the Health Canada
document “Canadian SARS Numbers” issued on September 3, 2003 (see http://www.phacaspc.gc.ca/sars-sras/cn-cc/20030903_e.html). This was the final tally of SARS cases reconciled
between Ontario authorities and Health Canada. It is this number (375) that is used in the report.
A retrospective study by the Ministry of Health and affected public health units issued in July 2006
suggested there were 351 SARS cases in Ontario, 301 probable and 50 suspect. We may never know
how many people actually had SARS. The numbers are uncertain because SARS mimicked other
diseases such as community acquired pneumonia, because there was no ready diagnostic test and
because governments never seemed able to agree fully on how to count the cases. The retrospective
study of SARS cases in Ontario cautioned: “As a result of only including cases meeting the Health
Canada definition, it is not possible to know the range of the clinical spectrum of SARS illness; this
report would likely represent cases at the more severe end of the clinical spectrum for SARS. For
example, there were children who were part of family clusters of SARS and had either fever or mild
respiratory symptoms, but did not meet the clinical criteria of the case definition and were not
included in the case count. Some of these children had serological testing and were positive for antibodies to SARS-CoV, therefore it is possible that SARS is a milder illness in children than in
adults”. (Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, in conjunction with the SARS Outbreak
Analysis Committee, “Descriptive epidemiology of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
outbreak” Ontario, Canada, 2003, July 2006).
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The Ontario Nurses’ Association surveyed its members after the outbreak and found
that almost two-thirds felt their health and safety had been compromised during the
SARS outbreak. More than half felt their SARS work was not adequately respected
or they were unsure if it was respected.
Their concerns were reflected in comments such as these:
I was torn between staying and quitting because my husband was scared.
Nobody listens to nurses.
Totally devastating on family life.
Hospitals closed; cancer treatments and heart surgery were postponed. Patients were
denied visitors. The sick and the dying suffered without the consolation of their families. The dead were disposed of quickly and in the absence of family and friends. The
wider impact of SARS through cancelled heart surgery and delayed cancer treatments
will never be known. And SARS was also an economic disaster for the country, the
province and the GTA in particular.
Things happened that should never have happened: deaths, unspeakable loss, untold
suffering. Where should we direct our outrage, our anger?
The evidence discloses no scapegoats. This was a system failure. The lack of preparation against infectious disease, the decline of public health, the failure of systems that
should protect nurses and paramedics and others from infection at work – all these
declines and failures went on through three successive governments of different political stripes. So too, in a sense, we as citizens failed ourselves because we did not insist
that these governments protect us better.
SARS taught us lessons that can help us redeem our failures. If we do not learn the
lessons to be taken from SARS, however, and if we do not make present governments
fix the problems that remain, we will pay a terrible price in the face of future
outbreaks of virulent disease.
Why was Ontario so unprepared for SARS? Our public health and emergency infrastructures were in a sorry state of decay, starved for resources by governments of all three
political parties. The health system’s capacity to protect its workers was in a state of
neglect: what little existed was badly malnourished. There was no system in place to
prevent SARS or to stop it in its tracks. The only thing that saved us from a worse disas2
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Introduction
ter was the courage and sacrifice and personal initiative of those who stepped up – the
nurses, the doctors, the paramedics and all the others – sometimes at great personal risk,
to get us through a crisis that never should have happened. Underlying all their work
was the magnificent response of the public at large: patient, cooperative, supportive.
But once is enough. If the deep systemic problems revealed by SARS are not fixed
before the next crisis, will these individuals and the public step up once more? Will they
throw themselves again into the breaches left open by the inaction of governments?
While SARS was a vicious disease, it presented us an opportunity to see a window
into our strengths and weaknesses and to ask “what if ” about many health issues.
Asking those questions and holding governments accountable for their answers is the
only way to ensure that we are protected when we are hit with the next outbreak or
pandemic.
In the wake of SARS many questions arise, including:
Why does SARS matter today?
How bad was SARS?
What went right?
What went wrong?
Were precautions relaxed too soon?
Who is there to blame?
Was information withheld?
Did politics intrude?
Was SARS I preventable?
Was SARS II preventable?
Were health workers adequately protected?
Are we safer now?
What must be done?
This third and final Commission report, based on public hearings, government and
hospital documents, and confidential interviews of more than 600 people connected
with SARS, tells the story of SARS and addresses these questions.
The Commission’s first interim report, in April 2004, addressed the deep problems of
public health infrastructure in Ontario and what must be done to make us safer. The
Commission’s second interim report, in April 2005, addressed glaring deficiencies in
Ontario health protection and emergency response laws and what must be done to
correct them.
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Although the Ontario government has taken significant steps to improve our level of
protection from infectious outbreaks like SARS, serious problems persist and much
remains to be done.2
Why should we care about SARS now, three years after the event?
We should care about SARS because we should never forget the loss and suffering,
and we should never forget the courage shown by so many. We should care about
SARS because it was a wake-up call and it holds the lessons we must learn to protect
ourselves against future similar outbreaks and against the global influenza pandemic
predicted by so many scientists.
On February 23, 2003, Mrs. K, the 78-year-old matriarch of a large Scarborough
family, returned home from a visit to Hong Kong. Unknowingly infected with SARS
after staying at the same hotel as a doctor from China’s Guangdong Province, she died
at home from apparent heart failure on March 5. Her son, Mr. T, was admitted to
Scarborough Grace Hospital (the Grace)on March 7. Suffering from a febrile respiratory illness, he waited in the crowded emergency ward for over 16 hours. During these
hours he transmitted SARS to two other patients, sparking a chain of infection that
spread through the Scarborough Grace Hospital, then to other hospitals through
patient transfers and ultimately killed 44 and sickened more than 330 others.
On March 7, British Columbia’s index patient, who had stayed at the same hotel in
Hong Kong as Mrs. K, was admitted to Vancouver General suffering from SARS, but
there was no further spread. A combination of a robust worker safety and infection
control culture at Vancouver General, with better systemic preparedness ensured that
B.C. was spared the devastation that befell Ontario.
By contrast, at the Grace, the early chain of transmission from Mr. T to the first 84
cases, as shown in the following chart,3 took place very quickly. The transmission of
these 84 probable and suspect cases could be linked to the six members of the index
family (the index case, her son and four members of the son’s family).
2. The Health System Improvements Act, 2006 was introduced to the Legislative Assembly on Tuesday
December 12 after this report was in the hands of the typesetter. The Commission has had no
opportunity to analyze it in detail and this footnote is added in the stage of proof correction. Bill 171
is a step forward in the sense that it proposes to implement approximately seven of the unimplemented recommendations of the Commission set out in the April 2004 and April 2005 interim
reports. For concerns about the lack of accountability of the proposed CDC North to the Chief
Medical Officer of Health see the recommendations in this final report.
3. Varia et al., “Investigation of a nosocomial outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in
Toronto, Canada,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 170, no. 6 (March 16, 2004): 927 (Varia
et al., “Investigation of a nosocomial outbreak of SARS.”).
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Introduction
SARS spread rapidly from the Scarborough Grace Hospital through the Torontoarea hospital system. The largest group of victims was health workers, because occupational safety4 and infection control systems,5 which are supposed to act together
seamlessly, one focused on safeguarding workers, the other on protecting patients,6
4. “The purpose of an Occupational Health (OH) program is to promote the health and well-being of
employees by providing a safe and healthy workplace, to prevent or decrease transmission of infection to or from health care workers due to workplace hazards, including biohazards, and to adhere to
legislation”. (Health Canada, Prevention and control of occupational infections in Health Care: An infection control guideline [Ottawa: Health Canada, 2002], p. 1).
5. “Nosocomial infections, acquired by patients as a result of receiving health care, are under the
purview of IC [Infection Control]” (Health Canada, Prevention and Control of Occupational Infections
in Health Care, p. 2).
6. Close cooperation between these two medical disciplines is essential for the safe operation of a
health care facility. Health Canada’s Prevention and Control of Occupational Infections in Health Care
(2002) states:
A component of the OH [occupational health] program relates specifically to infection control
and must be planned and delivered in collaboration with the Infection Control (IC) program of
the workplace. While this document supports the close collaboration of OH personnel with those
responsible for the IC program, it does not discuss measures that IC practitioners use to assess
and control infections in the patient population. Rather, it notes the essential collaboration of
both groups working together where responsibilities overlap, especially in the management of
outbreaks. Various workplaces will define the distinct roles of OH and IC practitioners differently
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failed to save them from harm. Two nurses and a doctor died. A provincial emergency
was declared on March 26 and strict measures were taken to contain the outbreak.
“Code Orange” froze hospital transfers and admissions, paralyzing the health system.
There was very little spread into the community. Community spread was stopped
immediately by bold public health efforts and stringent quarantine measures. By the
last week in April, the tough countermeasures had proved successful and the outbreak
subsided.
Ironically, it was just then, on April 23, that the World Health Organization (WHO)
issued a travel advisory against Toronto, an economic disaster for the city and the
province. Ontario’s Minister of Health and others flew to Geneva and the travel ban
was revoked after a week.
On May 1, Ontario and Health Canada took out large newspaper ads saying “Canada
Has Turned the Corner on SARS,” that Toronto was safe for business and tourism.
Muted declarations of victory were heard. Soon it became official. The emergency
was lifted on May 17, the province breathed a big sigh of relief, infection control and
worker safety precautions were relaxed, hospitals held celebrations and the health
system returned to the “new normal.”
Then something terrible happened. On May 23, officials called a press conference to
announce that a few new SARS cases had been discovered at St. John’s Rehabilitation
Centre. It was revealed, almost as an afterthought, that a “few” patients at North York
General Hospital also were being investigated for possible SARS. Under questioning
by the media, the truth emerged. A major outbreak of SARS had erupted at North
York General Hospital. SARS was back with a vengeance.
We know now that SARS never went away. It had continued to simmer undetected at
North York General Hospital. As soon as precautions were relaxed in early May, the
disease surged back and spread, again undetected, to patients, staff, visitors and their
families.
Stringent infection control and worker safety precautions, so recently relaxed, were
imposed once more. Health workers donned their N95 respirators and gowns and
gloves again. As soon as precautions were reinstated, the disease again subsided. We
outbreaks. Various workplaces will define the distinct roles of OH and IC practitioners differently to suit their health care environment, p.17.
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know now that behind the scenes a simple rule of nature was at work. Precautions up,
disease down; precautions down, disease up. This chart7 shows the remorseless pattern.
The second outbreak was devastating. In the end, 118 people contracted SARS
through their affiliation or contact with North York General Hospital. Of these 118
people, 54 were health workers and 64 were patients or visitors.8 Of these of the
127 people, 17 died. Of these 17, one was Nelia Laroza, a highly respected and much
loved nurse who worked on 4 West, the orthopedic unit where SARS simmered
undetected and undiagnosed. For those who fell ill and for those who lost loved ones,
the cost of SARS II is immeasurable.
Whenever one speaks of cost, the cost to the government to protect us better, the cost
to hospitals of better infection control, surveillance, and worker safety, we should
never forget the cost of SARS in sickness, pain, suffering, and unspeakable loss.
The second outbreak also had a terrible impact on the morale of health workers.
Many lost faith in the system and the ability of their employers to protect them. It
was not only the public who had been led to believe that SARS was gone. Nurses and
health workers were told that SARS was contained and that there were no new cases
7. Dr. Donald Low and Dr. Allison McGeer, “SARS – One Year Later,” NEJM 349:25, December 2003.
8. Presentation of Dr. Colin D’Cunha, SARS Commission Public Hearings, September 29, 2003.
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of SARS. SARS was over. Nurses at North York General, concerned about outbreaks
of staff illness and clusters of SARS-like illness were told again and again by the
hospital “Not SARS” when it turned out that these cases were in fact SARS.
On May 23rd, 2003, nurses and others at North York General learned, along with the
rest of the world, that SARS was not in fact over. It was not contained. There were
new cases of SARS right in their midst. Many of their colleagues were ill with SARS.
In the coming days it turned out that 39 workers9 at North York General had fallen ill
with SARS, after they had been told SARS was over.
But yet again these nurses and doctors and clerks and technicians were asked to step
into danger. And once again they did. Once again they risked their lives and health
for the sake of others. What is it in their character and their professional culture that
produced this courage? Will they heed that call the next time if they lack confidence
that governments and hospitals will protect them better?
The stories of the outbreaks at Scarborough Grace Hospital and North York General
Hospital reveal the systemic province-wide inadequacy of preparedness, infection
control and worker safety systems. Common problems and themes emerge from the
stories of both outbreaks. They reflect seven systemic problems that run like steel
threads through all of SARS, through every hospital and every government agency.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Communication
Preparation, planning
Accountability: who’s in charge, who does what?
Worker safety
Systems: infection control, surveillance, independent safety inspections
Resources: people, systems, money, laboratories, infrastructure
Precautionary principle: action to reduce risk should not await scientific certainty
The lesson from the stories of Scarborough Grace and North York General, and others,
is not that they deserve blame. The lesson is that because of systemic weaknesses what
happened there could have happened at almost any other hospital in the province.
We must also remember that both Scarborough Grace Hospital and North York
General are home to some of the finest and most dedicated physicians, nurses,
administrators and health workers in Canada. Many of those doctors, nurses and
9
Presentation of Dr. Colin D’Cunha, SARS Commission Public Hearings, September 29, 2003.
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other health workers worked tirelessly on the front lines during SARS, putting their
lives at risk to help others. They watched their friends and colleagues fall ill, at times
they had to care for them, all the while hoping they would not be next. As one
Scarborough Hospital nurse so eloquently described her SARS experience:
To watch this unfold, I don’t have vocabulary to express it. Just thinking
about it has been difficult. I think you can’t comprehend especially SARS
I how scary it was at that time because we had no idea. As we were shipping these people out to West Park and we are gloved, gowned and
masked and you are reaching to touch these people not knowing if you
will ever see them again, helping them get onto bus, all we knew in media
was that people were dying. They probably had no idea what they were
facing either. In my nursing career I have never faced anything so frightening. Looking back I think at the time because we were tired and we
were working, because it was so surreal you didn’t have the opportunity to
absorb it. That’s when the nightmares came. The going in circles, the
questioning, did we do it right, could we have done it better?
One nurse from 4 West, the epicentre of the second outbreak at North York General
Hospital, who worked the weekend of May 24 and 25, 2003, after learning that
SARS was back and that many of her friends and colleagues were ill, recalled how
afraid she and her family were, knowing she had to go back to work the next day, in
the epicentre of the outbreak:
I remember going Saturday morning and I said to my husband, he was in
the other room, and I said, I’m going to go, but I am so afraid, and I saw
my husband’s face and we both had tears in our eyes because I thought I
was the next one to get it. I was just so emotional. I just felt so awful. I
have to go in, I’m still standing here, I haven’t got SARS-well, to me I
didn’t have SARS-but I thought I was going to be the next one, cause all
our nurses were falling down.
When she was asked by the Commission if she ever considered not going to work,
she said:
I was one of the ones that could go in, to help my work. I think it’s your
duty to go in as a nurse, to go to the last, to the very end.
These are the heroes of SARS. Nothing in this report detracts from their dedication,
hard work and sacrifice. Nor does it detract from the distinction of the Scarborough
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Hospital or North York General as excellent hospitals. To tell their stories is not to
point fingers or assign blame, it is simply to tell what happened without any findings
of civil or criminal liability and without any adverse finding against the hospitals or
anyone associated with it.
The surprise is not that Ontario’s response to SARS worked so badly, but that it
worked at all, given the lack of preparation and systems and infrastructure. Despite
these problems, and despite the inevitable mistakes with a new disease and a system
unprepared for it, SARS was stopped by the front-line workers and the scientists and
specialists who stepped up and who were not afraid to take the strong measures that
worked in the end.
One of the most contentious issues during SARS was the N95 respirator, which was
supposed to protect nurses and other workers during close contact with SARS
patients.10 Although Ontario law required, since 1993, that anyone using an N95 had
to be properly trained and fit tested to ensure full protection, few hospitals complied
with this law and some even denied its existence. Fit testing was the subject of official
confusion and heated public debate. It became a lightning rod for all the underlying
problems of worker safety in hospitals.
The real problem is not the N95 respirator but the deep structural contradictions in
hospital worker safety. These problems include a profound lack of awareness within
the health system of worker safety best practices and principles. They include the failure of the Ministry of Labour to proactively inspect SARS hospitals until June 2003,
when the outbreak was virtually over. In B.C., by contrast, the workplace regulator
took decisive action and began inspections in early April, wanting to ensure that
workers were being protected from the start as required by law. The problems include
those in hospital administration and health bureaucracies who resist advice and
enforcement on hospital turf by independent worker safety experts and the provincial
Ministry of Labour. Most important, the problems include Ontario’s failure to recognize in hospital worker safety the precautionary principle that reasonable action to
reduce risk, like the use of a fitted N95 respirator, need not await scientific certainty.
There were during SARS two solitudes: infection control and worker safety. Infection
control relies on its best current understanding of science as it evolves over time. It is
unnecessary to point out again that infection control failed to protect nurses during SARS.
10. The N95 was sometimes required in other areas of a hospital even when not caring for SARS
patients. The provincial directives for the use of the N95 changed throughout SARS were not always
clear or consistent.
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Worker safety relies on the precautionary principle that reasonable action to reduce risk
should not await scientific certainty. More will be said below about these two solitudes.11
The debate about the N95, respiratory protection and fit testing can be understood
only in the context of the heavy burden of disease that fell on hospital workers, paramedics and others who worked in Ontario’s health system during SARS. Two nurses
and a doctor died from SARS. Almost half those who got SARS in hospital were
people who got SARS on the job from working there.
Part of the heated debate during the SARS outbreak was over whether N95 respirators were really necessary. Those who argued against the N95, which protects against
airborne transmission, believed SARS was spread mostly by large droplets. As a
result, they said, an N95 was unnecessary except in certain circumstances and a surgical mask was sufficient in most instances. They made this argument even though
knowledge about SARS and about airborne transmission was still evolving. That
more and more studies12 have since been published indicating the possibility under
certain circumstances of airborne transmission, not just of SARS but of influenza,
11. This is a good place to note that Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Sheela Basrur has taken steps
to improve this situation. Only time will tell if these steps are effective. Dr. Basrur notes in her letter
of March 9, 2006, to Linda Haslam-Stroud, RN, President, Ontario Nurses Association:
We recognize the need to ensure that the perspectives of occupational health and infection
control receive consideration. In light of this, an occupational health physician is included in the
membership of PIDAC and has been sitting on the committee since the inception of PIDAC in
2004. However, we see the importance in continuing to strengthen our links with the occupational health field and a physician delegate from the Ministry of Labour is now also sitting on
PIDAC. This highlights our commitment to ensuring that occupational health and safety
expertise is brought to the table during all PIDAC deliberations now and in the future. We are
confident that building on this approach will assist in ensuring stronger linkages between occupational health and infection control on matters of science.
12. I.T.S. Yu, Y.Li, T.W. Wong, et al., “Evidence of airborne transmission of the severe acute respiratory
syndrome,” New England Journal of Medicine 350 (2004): 1731-1739; Chad J. Roy and Donald K.
Milton, “Airborne transmission of communicable infection-the elusive pathway,” New England
Journal of Medicine 350 (2004), www.nejm.org; I.T.S. Yu et al., “Temporal-spatial analysis of severe
acute respiratory syndrome among hospital inpatients,” Clinical Infections Disease 40 (2005): 12371243; Booth et al., “Detection of airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus
and environmental contamination in SARS outbreak units,” Journal of Infectious Diseases 191 (2005):
1472-1477; Tommy R. Tong, “Airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and its implications,” Journal of Infectious Diseases 191 (2005): ; National Academy of Sciences, Reusability of Face
Masks During an Influenza Pandemic (Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences, April
2006); R. Tellier, “Review of aerosol transmission of influenza A virus,” Emerging Infectious Disease
(November 2006), www.cdc.gov/ncidod/EID/vol12noll/06-0426.htm.
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suggests the wisdom and prudence of taking a precautionary approach in the absence
of scientific certainty.
The point is not who is right and who is wrong about airborne transmission. The
point is not science, but safety. Scientific knowledge changes constantly. Yesterday’s
scientific dogma is today’s discarded fable. When it comes to worker safety in hospitals, we should not be driven by the scientific dogma of yesterday or even the scientific
dogma of today. We should be driven by the precautionary principle that reasonable
steps to reduce risk should not await scientific certainty.
Until this precautionary principle is fully recognized, mandated and enforced in
Ontario’s hospitals, workers will continue to be at risk.
Of the almost 375 people who contracted SARS in Ontario, 72 per cent were infected
in a heath care setting. Of this group, 45 per cent were health workers. Most of these
workers were nurses whose jobs brought them into the closest contact with sick
patients. And this does not show the full burden of SARS on nurses and paramedics
and other health workers. In many cases nurses sick with undetected SARS brought
illness, and in some cases death, home to their families.
One nurse answering the Ontario Nurses’ Association questionnaire wrote:
Fear … job not worth risk of dying. Lack of trust that nursing was
being protected.
The Commission is not surprised that in Vancouver, with its greater systemic awareness of and commitment to worker safety, only one health worker contracted SARS.
Again and again, health workers in Ontario were told they were safe if they would
only do what they were directed to by the hospitals and the government. Again and
again, these confident scientific assurances turned out to be tragically wrong. The
March 17 Scarborough Grace Hospital incident, the March 24 Mount Sinai Hospital
incident, the April 13 Sunnybrook Hospital incident and the May 28 North York
General Hospital incident show dramatically that the system, despite its scientific
self-confidence, was incapable of protecting workers from SARS.
It is no wonder that health workers became alarmed when they saw their colleagues
sicken and die. It is no wonder that they became angry when they saw such incidents
recur again and again with no apparent improvement in their safety. Nurses protested
that hospitals did not comply with the safety law that required that N95 respirators
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had to be fitted to ensure proper protection.
It is easy to forget that everyone makes mistakes and that hospitals acted and continue
to act in good faith. Ontario was not alone in its failure to protect health workers
during SARS. The challenge of this new disease overcame the extent of their current
scientific understanding. That is why it is better to forget dogmatic arguments based
on current scientific understanding. That is why it is better to follow the precautionary principle that reasonable action to reduce risk should not await scientific certainty.
And that is why it is important to recognize that Vancouver, which was spared the
devastation that SARS inflicted on Ontario, had a far greater systemic commitment
to the precautionary principle.
Hospitals did their best within the limits of their lack of preparation, their generally
inadequate infection control systems and their inadequate worker safety systems.
Inevitably they made mistakes in the fog of war against an invisible enemy. There was
no lack of good faith in the administration of the existing systems, flawed though they
were. Hospitals learned a lot from SARS, and a lot is better now. Hospitals are more
conscious of infection control and worker safety. North York General Hospital, for
instance, now has infection control and worker safety systems that have earned the
praise of its nurses.
The Ministry of Labour learned a lot too. It now has staff with health care–specific
expertise, and it has conducted stringent proactive inspections of all acute care
facilities.
Our hospitals still have a long way to go, especially in worker safety and with the
pushback from some against outside advice and help from the safety standards
community and the Ministry of Labour. Hospitals are dangerous workplaces, like
mines and factories, yet they lack the basic safety culture and workplace safety systems
that have become expected and accepted for many years in Ontario mines and factories and in British Columbia’s hospital.
Some of the same Ontario hospital leaders who argued against the N95 respirator
required to protect nurses and who actually denied there was a safety law that required
the N95 to be fit tested13 still insist that science, as it evolves from day to day, comes
before safety. If the Commission has one single take-home message it is the precautionary principle that safety comes first, that reasonable efforts to reduce risk need not
13. See “It’s Not About the Mask.”
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await scientific proof. Ontario needs to enshrine this principle and to enforce it
throughout our entire health system.
The Commission has not heard of any country or any health system that foresaw
SARS. No one foresaw the sudden emergence of an invisible unknown disease with
no diagnostic test, no diagnostic criteria, uncertain symptoms, an unknown clinical
course, an unknown incubation period, an unknown duration of infectivity, an
unknown virulence of infectivity, an unknown method of transmission, an unknown
attack rate, an unknown death rate, an unknown infectious agent and origin, no
known treatment and no known vaccine.
SARS taught us that we must be ready for the unseen. That is one of the most important lessons of SARS. Although no one did foresee and perhaps no one could foresee
the unique convergence of factors14 that made SARS a perfect storm, we know now
that new microbial threats like SARS have happened and can happen again.
However, there is no longer any excuse for governments and hospitals to be caught off
guard and no longer any excuse for health workers not to have available the maximum
level of protection through appropriate equipment and training.
14. See Institute of Medicine, Microbial threats to health: emergence, detection, and response, (March
2003). This paper noted, ironically just as SARS hit us, earlier warnings, and said, “We must do
more to improve our ability to prevent, detect, and control emerging – as well as resurging – microbial threats to health.” It warned presciently against a potentially “catastrophic storm of microbial
threats.”
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Thirteen Essential Questions
Introduction
SARS raised serious questions. Thirteen of the most important ones are addressed
here. Some answers are terribly clear. Were health workers adequately protected?
Clearly not. Other answers are less obvious. Could SARS II have been prevented? If
so, how? This section will summarize these answers as they emerge from the
Commission’s evidence and findings.
It is too easy after a public health crisis to assign individual blame. This is not to say in
hindsight that mistakes were not made or that systems should not be blamed. But
honest mistakes are inevitable in any human system. There is always more than
enough blame to go around if good faith mistakes made in the fog of crisis are
counted in hindsight as blameworthy.
The approach of this Commission as set out in its mandate and as reflected in its
approach is not to apportion blame but to find out what happened, to figure out how
to fix the problems revealed by SARS, to learn from these tragedies and to give a
legacy of betterment to those who died, those who fell ill, those who suffered so much
and those who fought it with such courage.
1. Why Does SARS Matter Today?
It is fair to ask, in respect of this final report, after so many reports and investigations,
the Naylor Report and the Walker Report and the Commission’s 2004 and 2005
interim reports, so what? What is gained now by telling in detail the story of SARS?
Why does SARS matter today, more than three years after the event, after the
government and the media have moved on to other crises, after those who suffered
from SARS have moved on as best as they can?
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After every disaster like SARS the years recede and memories fade. There is always
pain that has been forgotten, and things we choose not to recall. If we forget the
suffering and courage seen in the SARS crisis we diminish the sacrifices of Tecla Lin,
Nelia Laroza, Dr. Nestor Yanga and all those who died and those who suffered. Their
suffering and courage should not be in vain.
We must remember SARS because it holds lessons we must learn to protect ourselves
against future outbreaks, including a global influenza pandemic predicted by so many
scientists. If we do not learn from SARS and we do not make the government fix the
problems that remain, we will pay a terrible price in the next pandemic.
2. How Bad Was SARS?
The numbers, that 375 people contracted SARS and 44 died, do not tell the complete
story of how bad SARS was. They do not reflect the unspeakable losses of families
affected by SARS. They do not reflect the systemic failures that permitted these
deaths and illnesses.
SARS had Ontario’s health system on the edge of a complete breakdown. The
wonder is not that the health system worked so badly during SARS, but that it
worked at all. SARS also badly hurt Ontario’s international reputation, setting up an
unfortunate link in the minds of many in other countries between Toronto and a
mysterious deadly disease.
Worst of all, SARS demonstrated how many earlier wake-up calls had been ignored,
and how few of their warnings had been heeded. Many of the fault lines that appeared
during SARS were identified by earlier investigations and commissions, notably the
Krever Inquiry into tainted blood and the O’Connor Inquiry into tainted water.
SARS may be the last wake-up call we get before the next major outbreak of infection, whether it turns out to be an influenza pandemic or some other health crisis.
That is why we cannot forget how bad SARS was, and how much terrible suffering
and loss we must avoid the next time around. The tragedy of SARS, these stories of
unbearable loss and systemic failure, give the public every reason to keep the government’s feet to the fire in order to complete the initiatives already undertaken to make
us safer from infectious disease.
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3. What Went Right?
Despite its deep flaws, the system was supported by people of extraordinary commitment. What pulled us through was the hard work and the courage of those who
stepped up and fought SARS. What went right in a system where so much went
wrong is their dedication in the midst of chaos and enormous workload pressures. It
was a tireless fight in the fog of battle against a deadly and mysterious disease. We
should be humbled by their efforts.
SARS produced so many heroes that it is impossible to identify them all and no
attempt has been made to do so. Some happen to be mentioned in this report when
their names are essential to the narrative.
One hero was the public, which rose magnificently to meet the challenge. Any fight
against infectious disease depends above all on public cooperation. SARS could not
have been contained in Toronto without the tremendous public cooperation and without the individual sacrifice of those who were quarantined. It is essential to ensure that
the spirit of cooperation shown during SARS is not taken for granted. It must be
nurtured and promoted.
4. What Went Wrong?
SARS took hold because of a confluence of systemic weaknesses in worker safety,
infection control and public health. The Commission’s first interim report identified
21 deep systemic flaws in public health infrastructure. The second interim report
identified serious shortcomings in health protection and emergency management
laws. This final report identifies further areas of unresolved problems, particularly in
the domain of health worker safety. Because of these systemic weaknesses, SARS was
a disaster waiting to happen.
The public health system was broken, neglected, inadequate and dysfunctional. It was
unprepared, fragmented, uncoordinated. It lacked adequate resources, was professionally impoverished and was generally incapable of fulfilling its mandate.
Ontario was not prepared for a public health crisis like SARS. It didn’t even have a
pandemic plan.
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There was a grave lack of worker safety expertise, resources and awareness in the
health system, a lack whose impact was compounded by a similar lack of infection
control expertise and resources. Not only that, but infection control and worker safety
operated as two solitudes, and public health and hospitals operated as separate silos.
And the Ministry of Labour was sidelined.
Also missing were two key components of a safe workplace: Neither internal responsibility systems nor joint health and safety committees were, in general, fulfilling their
intended roles and responsibilities.
The trust of health workers in the ability of government, safety laws, and their
employers to safeguard them and their colleagues was broken. Health workers learned
that those in charge were poorly informed and inadequately advised to make
pronouncements on worker safety and personal protective equipment. A prime example was the lack of awareness throughout the health and hospital system of the legal
requirement for respirator fit testing.
5. Were Precautions Relaxed Too Soon?
In May 2003, the government implemented a series of measures that led to the relaxation of precautions on May 13 and to the lifting of the provincial emergency four
days later. But SARS had not gone away. How could victory over SARS have been
declared when it was spreading undetected at North York General Hospital? Were
precautions relaxed too soon?
Knowing when to announce the “all clear” is very difficult. There were similar
instances during the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918–1919, when victory was declared
too early. Decision makers are in a tough spot during a public health emergency.
React too early in a preventive mode and they may be accused of having generated
another “swine flu” problem. Lift precautions too early and they may be accused of
recklessness and bowing to political pressure.
There is no easy answer to the question of whether precautions were lifted too soon.
In hindsight it turned out to be a mistake because as soon as precautions were relaxed
the SARS cases simmering undetected at North York General flared up into the
second outbreak. But the decision was made at the time in good faith on the best
medical advice available and after two incubation periods with no new detected cases
did it appear appropriate to relax the precautions and institute the “new normal” with
precaution levels higher than they were before SARS.
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As noted in the report, one of the underlying reasons for the second outbreak was the
lack of any system to ensure surveillance of the kind that would have detected the
North York General cases before they spread. Although the relaxation of precautions
triggered the second outbreak, its more underlying cause has more to do with the lack
of systems to ensure adequate surveillance.
6. Who Is There to Blame?
No one. The evidence throws up no scapegoats. This will disappoint those who seek
someone to blame.
It is too easy to seek out scapegoats. The blame game begins after every public
tragedy. While those who look for blame will always find it, honest mistakes are
inevitable in any human system. There is always more than enough blame to go
around if good faith mistakes made in the heat of battle are counted in hindsight as
blameworthy.
More important than blame is to find out what happened, to figure out how to fix the
problems, to learn something from these tragedies, to give a legacy of betterment to
those who died and those who fell ill and those who suffered so much.
This was a system failure. We were all part of it because we get the public health
system and the hospital system we deserve. We get the emergency management
system we deserve and we get the pandemic preparedness we deserve. The lack of
preparation against infectious disease, the decline of public health, the failure of
systems that should protect nurses and paramedics and doctors and all health workers
from infection at work, all these declines and failures went on through three successive governments of different political stripes. We all failed ourselves, and we should
all be ashamed because we did not insist that these governments protect us better.
It is also hard to find blame because blame requires accountability. Accountability was
so blurred during SARS that it is difficult even now to figure out exactly who was in
charge of what. Accountability means that when something goes wrong you know who
to look for and you know where to find them. That kind of accountability was missing
during SARS and remains blurred even today. What we need is a system with clear lines
of authority and accountability to prepare us better for the next infectious outbreak.
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7. Was Information Withheld?
There is no evidence that information was deliberately withheld. But there is much
evidence of serious communication failure.
Bad communication is a steel thread throughout the story of SARS. Poor communication exacerbated a confusing and terrible time. This happened again and again.
In February and early March 2003, health workers in Ontario, unlike their colleagues
in B.C., were not alerted to the emergence of a mysterious new disease in China and
Hong Kong. Until mid-May 2003, directives failed to remind employers of their
worker safety legal obligations. And over and over when new hospital outbreaks were
detected, there were inordinate delays before all workers who might have been
exposed were contacted.
Bad communication between governments and agencies and hospitals is evidenced
in many cases throughout this report. Although a real effort was made by government and public health to give the public timely and accurate information, performance was mixed. In some instances public communication was excellent, as in the
work of Dr. Sheela Basrur, the Chief Medical Officer of Health for Toronto. In some
instances, like the disastrous May 23 press conference, public communication was
like a train wreck.
8. Did Politics Intrude?
The Commission finds on the basis of the evidence and analysis set out in this chapter that there was no political or economic pressure brought to bear on the health
system or public health or hospitals in order to minimize or hide SARS or to say that
a SARS case was not SARS or to declare prematurely that SARS was over.
9. Was SARS I Preventable?
There is an element of speculation in any attempt to say whether a disaster could have
been prevented by this measure or that measure. History is full of what-ifs. Like every
other historical what-if, there is an element of speculation in any attempt to say
whether the SARS disaster could have been prevented, by earlier isolation and investigation, by a differently configured emergency room, by different infection control
procedures, worker safety precautions or training or alertness.
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The short answer is no, SARS I was not preventable. No country escaped SARS
entirely. Vancouver certainly did better than Toronto. Although the presentation of
the index cases was much different in each case, there are enough similarities to
warrant comparison in terms of preparedness and worker safety systems. There was
undoubtedly an element of good fortune that saved Vancouver from the devastation
that SARS wrought on Ontario. But it must also be said that Vancouver made its own
luck with better preparedness and systemic strengths.
It cannot be proven that SARS I could have been prevented if Ontario’s systemic
weaknesses in preparedness, surveillance, worker safety, infection control and public
health had been adequately addressed before SARS. It is likely that SARS I could
have been contained more quickly and with less damage had the right systems been in
place in Ontario.
In B.C., even if the province was luckier than Ontario in the presentation of its index
case, SARS was, nonetheless, more effectively contained in a jurisdiction with better
preparation and more robust and more collaborative worker safety, infection control
and public health systems.
British Columbia provides a useful example of how well things can work and how
well health workers can be protected when there is a strong safety culture. It provides
an example of how things can and should work in Ontario.
10. Was SARS II Preventable?
We will never know if SARS II could have been prevented.
What can be said, for the reasons set out below, is that the opportunity was greater to
prevent SARS II than to prevent SARS I, and that SARS II could have been caught
earlier and its impact lessened had the right systems been in place.
First, as a mostly nosocomial outbreak, SARS spread primarily within the contained
space of health workplaces. Unlike a flu pandemic, it did not spread uncontrollably in the
community. Second, it spread precisely in the kind of workplaces that should be optimally prepared to protect patients, visitors and workers from infectious diseases. Third, it
occurred more than two months after Mr. T presented at Scarborough Grace Hospital. It
is one thing to be caught off guard, as Ontario was, at the start of SARS. It is another to
have failed to learn enough over a two-month period to prevent a major recurrence.
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The problem was that these factors, which should have made it easier to prevent and
control SARS II, were undermined by the many systemic flaws revealed by SARS,
including insufficient surveillance, inadequate infection control expertise and
resources, a lack of worker safety resources and expertise, blurred accountability, and
inadequate communication systems between hospitals and public health.
11. Were Health Workers Adequately Protected?
The answer is no. It is tragically clear that health workers were not adequately
protected. This is demonstrated by the heavy burden of disease on hospital workers,
paramedics and others who worked in Ontario’s health system during SARS. Two
nurses and a doctor died from SARS. Other health workers fell ill, including paramedics, medical technicians and cleaners, and many of them unknowingly infected
their families. Almost half of those who contracted SARS were health workers who
got it on the job. It would have been one thing if all had been infected at the start of
the outbreak when little was known about the disease. The full extent of worker safety
failings during SARS is revealed by the fact that workers continued to get sick in
April and up to the end of May, long after the Scarborough Grace outbreak.
Table 1 – Probable and Suspect SARS Cases
Contracted in Health Care Settings15
Category
Phase 1
Phase 2
Health Workers
Patients
Visitors
Total
118
23
20
161
51
35
23
109
Total Number of Percentage of
Suspect and
Total Number
Probable Cases of Cases (375)
169
58
43
270
45%
15%
11%
72%
Many factors contributed to this. There was a lack of worker safety resources and
expertise in the health system heading into SARS. The health system generally did
not understand its obligations under worker safety laws and regulations. There was a
lack of understanding of occupational safety as a discipline separate from infection
control. Infection control and occupational safety operated as two solitudes. The
Ministry of Labour was largely sidelined during SARS; its ability to play a greater
15. Presentation of Dr. Colin D’Cunha, SARS Commission Public Hearings, Sept. 29, 2003.
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enforcement and regulatory role as required by law to protect workers had been seriously undermined by funding and resource cuts in the 1990s.
12. Are We Safer Now?
The short answer is yes, somewhat safer. The long answer that we are not yet as safe
as we should be.
The Commission’s first interim report, in April 2004, addressed the deep problems of
public health infrastructure in Ontario and what must be done to make us safer. The
Commission’s second interim report, in April 2005, addressed glaring deficiencies in
Ontario’s health protection and emergency response laws and what must be done to
correct them.
Although the Ontario government and individual hospitals have taken significant
steps to improve our level of protection from infectious outbreaks such as SARS, serious problems persist. Much remains to be done. What has been accomplished thus
far, though commendable, marks the beginning of the end of the effort to fix the
problems revealed by SARS. The end will not be reached until Ontario has a health
system with robust and collaborative infection control, worker safety and public
health functions.
As the Commission’s second interim report said:
After long periods of neglect, inadequate resources and poor leadership, it
will take years of sustained funding and resources to correct the
damage.16
13. What Must Be Done?
SARS revealed a broad range of systemic failures: the lack of preparation against
infectious disease outbreaks, the decline of public health, the failure of systems that
should protect nurses and paramedics and others from infection at work, the inade-
16. SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 297.
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quacy of infection control programs to protect patients and visitors to health facilities,
and the blurred lines of authority and accountability.
SARS taught us lessons that can help us redeem our failures. These lessons are
reflected in the Commission’s recommendations for change.
Perhaps the most important lesson of SARS is the importance of the precautionary
principle. SARS demonstrated over and over the importance of the principle that we
cannot wait for scientific certainty before we take reasonable steps to reduce risk. This
principle should be adopted as a guiding principle throughout Ontario’s health, public
health and worker safety systems.
If we do not learn this and other lessons of SARS, and if we do not make present
governments fix the problems that remain, we will leave a bitter legacy for those who
died, those who fell ill and those who suffered so much. And we will pay a terrible
price in the face of future outbreaks of virulent disease, whether in the form of foreseen outbreaks like flu pandemics or unforeseen ones, as SARS was.
SARS taught us that we must be ready for the unseen. SARS taught us that new
microbial threats like SARS have happened and can happen again. And it gave us a
first-hand glimpse of the even greater devastation a flu pandemic could create.
There is no longer any excuse for governments and hospitals to be caught off guard,
no longer any excuse for health workers not to have available the maximum reasonable level of protection through appropriate equipment and training, and no longer
any excuse for patients and visitors not to be protected by effective infection control
practices.
As the Commission warned in its first interim report:
Ontario … slept through many wake-up calls. Again and again the
systemic flaws were pointed out, again and again the very problems that
emerged during SARS were predicted, again and again the warnings
were ignored.
The Ontario government has a clear choice. If it has the necessary political will, it can make the financial investment and the long-term commitment to reform that is required to bring our public health protection
against infectious disease up to a reasonable standard. If it lacks the
necessary political will, it can tinker with the system, make a token
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investment, and then wait for the death, sickness, suffering and economic
disaster that will come with the next outbreak of disease.
The strength of the government’s political will can be measured in the
months ahead by its actions and its long-term commitments.17
17. SARS Commission, first interim report, p. 210.
25
Recommendations
Introduction
The first interim report, SARS and Public Health in Ontario, focused on public health
renewal. The Commission said:
Because government decisions about fundamental changes in the public
health system are clearly imminent, this interim report on the public
health lessons of SARS is being issued at this time instead of awaiting
the final report … The fact that the Commission must address public
health renewal on an interim basis is not to say it is more important than
any other urgent issue such as the safety and protection of health care
workers. It is simply a case of timing.18
The Commission set out 21 principles for reforming the shortcomings of the
public health system demonstrated by SARS. It also made recommendations to
address urgent problems that had to be corrected to prevent another tragedy like
SARS, including a lack of provincial public health leadership, insufficient public
health capacity and resources, inadequate provincial laboratory capacity, a lack of
central public health coordination and expertise, an absence of public health emergency preparedness, and a lack of public health links with hospitals, health workers
and others.
The second interim report, SARS and Public Health Legislation, focused on public
health legislation. The Commission said:
This second interim report deals with legislation to strengthen the Health
Protection and Promotion Act and to enact emergency powers for public
health disasters like SARS or flu pandemics. It is produced now to
respond to current government plans for further amendments to Health
18. SARS Commission, first interim report, p. 1.
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Protection and Promotion Act and radical changes to the Emergency
Management Act.19
The Commission made recommendations regarding Chief Medical Officer of Health
independence and leadership, local public health governance, public health legal
preparedness and emergency legislation, public health resources, and overhauling the
Health Protection and Promotion Act, including strengthening health protection powers
and clarifying infectious disease reporting requirements.
This third and final report makes recommendations arising from the story of how
SARS devastated Ontario and was not contained until 375 people contracted the
disease and 44 died. Not surprisingly in an outbreak where nurses, doctors and other
health workers constituted the largest single group of SARS cases, many of the
recommendations address worker safety issues. As the Commission noted in its
second interim report:
Suggestions have been received for legislation to strengthen occupational
health and safety protection for health workers. That issue will be dealt
with in the final report. Occupational health and safety is a vital aspect of
the Commission’s work.20
The Commission benefited greatly from written and oral submissions delivered
during the course of the public hearings and in response to several calls for submissions from the beginning to the end of the investigation. Many submissions and
presentations from the public hearings are on the Commission’s website.
The submissions from government, hospitals, unions and many sectors of the health
community noted significant improvements since SARS and significant areas where
more needs to be done. These submissions constitute just under a banker’s box of
material. This material, together with all public records of the Commission’s work,
have been transmitted to the Archives of Ontario21 and will be available to the public
according to archival policy.
19. SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 1.
20. SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 1.
21. The Commission has transmitted to the Archives of Ontario all non-confidential material. The
Commission’s report is by its terms of reference subject to Ontario’s privacy and freedom of information legislation, in the sense that the report itself is publicly available and must respect the confidentiality of personal health information. Because the Commission is independent from
government, its confidential work product is not subject to those statutes. Much of the
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Recommendations
Precautionary Principle
In The Commission of Inquiry on the Blood System in Canada, Mr. Justice Krever said:
Where there is reasonable evidence of an impending threat to public
health, it is inappropriate to require proof of causation beyond a reasonable doubt before taking steps to avert the threat.22
The importance of the precautionary principle that reasonable efforts to reduce risk
need not await scientific proof was demonstrated over and over during SARS. The
need to apply it better is noted throughout this report.
One example was the debate during SARS over whether SARS was transmitted by
large droplets or through airborne particles. The point is not who was right and who
was wrong in this debate. When it comes to worker safety in hospitals, we should not
be driven by the scientific dogma of yesterday or even the scientific dogma of today.
We should be driven by the precautionary principle that reasonable steps to reduce
risk should not await scientific certainty.
A precautionary approach also was in use at Vancouver General Hospital when it
received B.C.’s first SARS case on March 7, 2003, the same day Ontario’s index case
presented at Scarborough Grace Hospital. When dealing with an undiagnosed respiratory illness, health workers at Vancouver General automatically go to the highest
level of precautions, and then scale down as the situation is clarified. While the
circumstances at Vancouver General and the Grace were different, it is not surprising
that SARS was so effectively contained at an institution so steeped in the precautionary principle.
In Ontario there was a systemic failure to recognize the precautionary principle in
health worker safety, and in the identification and diagnosis of a respiratory illness
that mimicked the symptoms of other, better-known diseases. Amid this systemic
absence of the precautionary principle, it is not surprising that in Ontario, unlike in
Vancouver, SARS caused such devastation, infecting 375 people, including 169 health
workers, and killing 44, including two nurses and a physician.
Commission’s work product consists of confidential informant interviews, notes and documents
produced or obtained under a promise of confidentiality that attracts in law.
22. The Krever Report, p. 295; see also pp. 989-994.
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The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the precautionary principle, which states that action to reduce
risk need not await scientific certainty, be expressly adopted as a guiding principle throughout Ontario’s health, public health and worker
safety systems by way of policy statement, by explicit reference in all
relevant operational standards and directions, and by way of inclusion,
through preamble, statement of principle, or otherwise, in the
Occupational Health and Safety Act, the Health Protection and Promotion
Act, and all relevant health statutes and regulations.
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, the precautionary principle
guide the development, implementation and monitoring of procedures, guidelines, processes and systems for the early detection and
treatment of possible cases.
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, the precautionary principle
guide the development, implementation and monitoring of worker
safety procedures, guidelines, processes and systems.
Public Health System
SARS showed that Ontario’s public health system is broken and needs to be fixed.
Since then, while much progress has been made, after long periods of neglect, inadequate resources and poor leadership, much more remains to be done. Every recommendation to the Commission in respect of public health noted the need for more
resources.23
23.
One of the best examples is the July 19, 2006, submission by Dr. David McKeown, the Toronto
Medical Officer of Health, who noted in particular these six problems:
1. The role and authority of Public Health with respect to non-reportable diseases must be
strengthened.
2. The reporting capability of iPHIS [the integrated Public Health Information System] must be
improved. In addition, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (MOHLTC) must move
forward more rapidly to enable electronic reporting of cases from laboratories, hospitals and
physicians to local Public Health.
3. The MOHLTC and the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario must develop mech-
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Recommendations
As the Commission’s second interim report said:
As the province moves into the latter stages of Operation Health
Protection, stages when significant funding will be required, the challenge will be to provide the necessary resources to sustain the momentum
for change despite the government’s other budgetary pressures.
The point has to be made again and again that resources are essential to
give effect to public health reform. Without additional resources, new
leadership and new powers will do no good. To give the Chief Medical
Officer of Health a new mandate without new resources is to make her
powerless to effect the promised changes. As one thoughtful observer
told the Commission:
The worst-case scenario is basically to get the obligation to do this
and not get the resources to do it. Then the Chief Medical Officer of
Health would have a legal duty that [he or she] can’t exercise.
To arm the public health system with more powers and duties without
the necessary resources is to mislead the public and to leave Ontario
vulnerable to outbreaks like SARS.24
SARS also disclosed many problems with the Health Protection and Promotion Act that
anisms to enable all licensed physicians in the province to receive urgent health alerts electronically.
4. The MOHLTC must clarify the role and authority of Public Health with respect to infection
control in hospitals and other institutions.
5. Overall public health capacity must be strengthened. This requires an enhanced budget, not
just a change in the cost-sharing formula. In addition the human resources issues are serious
and growing, in particular with respect to Community Medicine physician specialists who are
critical in an infectious disease emergency.
6. The full independence of the Chief Medical Officer of Health role is required. The current
position combines this independent role, which may lead to conflict between government
interests and health needs of the public.
24.
SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 303.
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were the subject of extensive recommendations in the second interim report.25 These
included problems arising from the necessary use of a blunt instrument like the Code
Orange status, and confusion about infectious disease reporting obligations.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Government complete the process of fixing the public
health system, including:
— Conducting the major overhaul of the Health Protection and
Promotion Act recommended in the Commission’s second interim
report to remove dangerous uncertainties like the confusion about
infectious disease reporting obligations that occurred during
SARS, and to provide authorities with the ability to provide a
more tightly focused response than was possible under the blunt
instrument of the Code Orange status;
— Completing the review of the Mandatory Health Programs and
Services Guidelines, and moving from a system of guidelines to a
more accountable one based on performance-linked program
standards;
— Establishing the Ontario Health Protection and Promotion
Agency;
— Revitalizing the Central Public Health Laboratory; and
— Providing sufficient and sustained funding for public health.
Ontario Agency for Health Protection and
Promotion, and the CMOH
Although there is much wisdom in the proposal for an Ontario Agency for Health
Protection and Promotion, the recommended structure26 fails to take into account the
major SARS problem of divided authority and accountability.
25.
26.
SARS Commission, second interim report, pp. 404-416.
See Final Report of the Agency Implementation Task Force, From Vision to Action: A Plan for the
Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion, March 2006; Report of the Agency
Implementation Task Force, Building an Innovative Foundation: A Plan for the Ontario Agency for
Health Protection and Promotion, October 2005.
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Recommendations
As the Commission noted in its second interim report:
… the SARS response was also hamstrung by an unwieldy emergency
leadership structure with no one clearly in charge. A de facto arrangement
whereby the Chief Medical Officer of Health of the day shared authority
with the Commissioner of Public Safety and Security resulted in a lack of
clarity as to their respective roles which contributed to hindering the
SARS response.27
An important lesson from SARS is that the last thing Ontario needs, in planning for
the next outbreak and to deal with it when it happens, is another major independent
player on the block.
The first report of the Agency Implementation Task Force said:
A body at arm’s-length from the government was recommended in the
Walker, Campbell and Naylor reports, was a commitment in Operation
Health Protection and aligns with the successful experience of the INSPQ
[L’Institut national de santé publique du Québec].28
The Commission in fact recommended a much different arrangement in its first
interim report, and warned against creating another “silo,” another autonomous body,
when SARS demonstrated the dangers of such uncoordinated entities:
First, the structure of the new agency or centre, which will combine advisory and operational functions, must reflect the appropriate balance
between independence and accountability whether it is established as a
Crown corporation or some other form of agency insulated from direct
Ministerial control.
Second, it should be an adjunct to the work of the Chief Medical Officer
of Health and the local Medical Officers of Health, not a competing
body. SARS showed that there are already enough autonomous players
on the block who can get in each other’s way if not properly coordinated.
There is always a danger in introducing a semi-autonomous body into a
27.
28.
SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 323.
Report of the Agency Implementation Task Force, Building an Innovative Foundation: A Plan for
the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion, October 2005, p. 16.
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system like public health that is accountable to the public through the
government. The risk is that such a body can take on a life of its own and
an ivory tower agenda of its own that does not necessarily serve the
public interest it was designed to support.29
Consequently, the Commission recommended that the Chief Medical Officer of
Health have a hands-on role at the agency, including a seat on the board.30
The Agency Implementation Task Force took a completely opposite approach,
recommending against giving the Chief Medical Officer of Health a seat as a voting
member of the board, and recommending a very autonomous role for the agency.
This proposed arrangement ignores important lessons from SARS.
The Commission, far from recommending a completely arm’s-length organization,
pointed out the need for the Chief Medical Officer of Health to be in charge with the
assistance of the agency, which should, albeit with a measure of policy independence,
be operationally accountable to the Chief Medical Officer of Health.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
29.
30.
That the government reconsider in light of the lessons of SARS the
Agency Implementation Task Force’s recommendation regarding the
relationship between the Chief Medical Officer of Health and the
agency.
SARS Commission, first interim report, p. 19.
The first interim report said:
To ensure that the new Ontario agency complements the service mandate of the public health
system, the relationship must be clear between the new Ontario agency and the Chief Medical
Officer of Health. Unless he or she has a clear say in the ongoing work and overall direction of
the agency, and the ability to mobilize the resources of the agency to meet a public health
problem when required, the agency will not fulfill its role as a source of support to public
health operations. The Chief Medical Officer of Health must have more than a token role in
the direction of any such agency. If the new agency is to have a Board of Directors, the Chief
Medical Officer of Health, if not its Chair, should be at least its Associate Chair. To the extent
the agency is operational as opposed to purely advisory, the Chief Medical Officer of Health
must, in the face of a public health problem, be able to direct the operational resources of the
agency so as best to meet the problem at hand, whether the resources are epidemiological,
laboratory, or other.
SARS Commission, first interim report, p. 188.
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Emergency Plans for Orderly Hospital Closure
Before SARS no one was prepared for the possibility that a hospital might need to be
closed to contain an infectious disease outbreak. Yet this is what happened on three
occasions during SARS, at the Scarborough Grace Hospital, York Central Hospital
and North York General Hospital. No one in Ontario had had to do this before.
SARS demonstrated the immense difficulty of closing a hospital in the middle of an
outbreak, when no one had done it before, when no one had planned for this possibility, and when no exercises and education had been conducted to train staff on how to
do it. It is to the credit of all those involved in closing Scarborough Grace, York
Central and North York General that they accomplished the task despite having
never had the experience of and knowledge from doing so before.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
The development of emergency plans for orderly hospital closure to
avoid problems of the kind that arose at the Grace, York Central and
North York General, to cover all eventualities and in particular:
— Effective means for immediately notifying staff at the institution
of any potential risk.
— Effective means for immediately notifying staff not on duty at the
institution of any potential risk.
— Systems for rapidly securing the names and tracing information of
everyone at the hospital at the time including visitors to patients.
— Amendment of the Health Protection and Promotion Act to ensure
duty to identify for purpose of public health tracing.31
31.
The second interim report said:
A submission to the Commission from a group of experts, who were all closely involved in the
SARS response, recommended that the reporting sections of the Health Protection and
Promotion Act be amended to support the work of health units in tracing the contacts of
patients with infectious diseases:
The current HPPA does not give specific reference to contacts of infectious cases. Release
of information on the cases as well as contacts is essential for infectious disease control.
This was a major obstacle during the management of the SARS outbreak. We believe that
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— Prearranged, rehearsed protocols for police assistance.
— Immediate medical backup for those dependent on the hospital,
such as obstetrics, dialysis and oncology.
— Effective means for immediately informing the public, families of
patients and the wider hospital community.
•
That hospital emergency closing plans be rehearsed and reviewed on
a periodic basis to reflect lessons learned in training exercises and
emergency management best practices.
Effective Distribution of Outbreak Alerts
When Mr. T presented to the Grace on March 7, 2003, health workers did not know
to be on the lookout for unusual respiratory illnesses. Unlike their counterparts in
B.C., they had not been alerted to the emergence of a mysterious new disease in
China and Hong Kong. Three years after SARS, public health officials told the
Commission there is still no means to communicate quickly and effectively with
Ontario’s physicians. SARS demonstrated that alerts and other communications need
to quickly reach all workplace parties, including employers, health workers, unions
and Joint Health and Safety Committees.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Health develop and implement an effective
means to alert all workplace parties, including health workers,
the requirement to report contacts referred to specifically in the legislation will allow practitioners to provide this information to their medical officer of health.
The amendments to Regulation 569, effected in Regulation 01/05, address this issue.
Contacts initially identified or later traced are included in most of the lists specifying additional information that must be reported to the medical officer of health. In particular, it is
included in the case of SARS, TB, influenza and febrile respiratory illness. This means that
those who have reporting obligations under the Act are now required to provide contact information.
Source: SARS Commission, second interim report, p. 199.
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employers, unions and Joint Health and Safety Committees, in a
timely manner about infectious disease threats.
•
That in preparation for the possibility of a public health crisis like
SARS or a pandemic, health institutions develop and implement
effective means to communicate to their workers information regarding the outbreak, the health risk, the containment strategy, and measures to protect workers, patients and visitors.
Directives
Directives on N95 respirators and other worker safety issues were prepared without
appropriate oversight by the Ministry of Labour, adequate input from worker safety
experts, and sufficient participation by workplace parties including unions, employers and Joint Health and Safety Committees. The inadequacies of directives do not
reflect on those who prepared them, and who deserve praise for their remarkable
effort under difficult circumstances with insufficient resources, infrastructure or planning. Regardless of the reasons for the directives’ failings, the reality is that for most of
the outbreak they failed to provide the detailed advice that health workers, their
supervisors and their employers needed. Workplace parties also reported their continuing difficulties in providing feedback to the Provincial Operations Centre on issues
that arose when implementing directives.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, the preparation of directives involving worker safety be supervised, reviewed and approved by
the Ministry of Labour in a process that is transparent and easily
understood by all workplace parties.
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, directives involving worker
safety be jointly prepared by infection control and worker safety
experts to reflect their overlapping responsibilities and thereby ensure
that patients, workers and visitors are kept safe.
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, directives involving worker
safety be prepared with input from the workplace parties who have to
implement them, including employers, health worker representatives
and Joint Health and Safety Committees.
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•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, directives and other
communications involving worker safety reference the specific applicable sections of the Occupational Health and Safety Act, and its regulations, so that employers and workers are fully informed of worker
safety legal requirements.
•
That the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health cooperate in
developing and implementing an effective communication system for
receiving timely feedback from workplace parties, including employers, unions and Joint Health and Safety Committees, regarding any
problems encountered when implementing worker safety directives,
policies, procedures and systems.
•
That when issuing any communication affecting worker safety, the
Ministry of Health consult with the Ministry of Labour, and ensure
that there are clear, specific references to relevant worker safety laws,
regulations, guidelines and best practices, and that employers are fully
informed of their legal obligations to protect workers.
Effective Crisis Communication
There were many systemic problems with crisis communications during SARS.
Workplace parties, including unions and the Ministry of Labour, told the
Commission of their difficulties in receiving directives in a timely manner and in
gaining access to Ministry of Health websites. Employers and workers’ representatives
often had great difficulty in receiving timely responses to questions to the Provincial
Operations Centre, Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Labour, on important
issues, including work refusals, safety of pregnant workers, and safety of immunocompromised workers. Workers’ representatives also said they were not aware of such
internal Ministry of Labour documents as the 1984 agreement with the Ministry of
Health and the protocol dated April 2, 2003. In some cases, media reports were more
informative on SARS than communications by health institutions to their workers.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health cooperate in
developing and implementing an effective communication system to
ensure that in the event of an infectious disease outbreak all workplace parties, including front-line health workers, employers, unions
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and Joint Health and Safety Committees, receive relevant communications, including directives, in a timely manner.
•
That in the event of any future infectious disease crisis, the Ministry
of Labour provide in a timely manner clear direction and information
regarding guidelines for work refusals, pregnant workers and immunocompromised workers.
•
That in the event of an infectious disease outbreak, any protocol
regarding the Ministry of Labour’s response, such as the Ministry’s
April 2, 2003, protocol, be communicated in a timely manner to
employers, unions, Joint Health and Safety Committees and other
workplace parties.
Risk Communication
The story of the psychiatric patients and the clusters of family illness in May at North
York General demonstrates the importance of clear communication and a clear understanding of the respective roles and responsibilities in an outbreak investigation. Frontline nurses and physicians believed these patients had SARS. Public Health believed these
patients, while not classified as having SARS, were being treated as persons under investigation and were being investigated and monitored. The hospital, in good faith, sincerely
believed that SARS had been ruled out. In good faith, it also repeated this message to staff
and tried to convince staff they were safe. This led to an important disconnect at North
York General between what front-line nurses and physicians saw and what the hospital
told its employees. The Commission accepts that everyone involved was doing what they
thought was right. The problem was that staff in good faith were given assurances with a
confidence that was not warranted in the circumstances.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Health ensure that the respective roles and
responsibilities of public health and hospitals during an infectious
disease outbreak are clarified and clearly understood by all parties.
•
That public health and hospitals jointly develop processes to ensure
that public health advice to hospitals regarding patient diagnosis in a
disease outbreak, especially with an infectious disease like SARS that
is difficult to identify, clearly reflect all the attendant health risks.
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That risk communication to staff reflect a precautionary approach,
that it is better to err on the side of caution, especially when dealing
with a little-understood new disease like SARS.
Listening to Front-Line Health Workers
During SARS, front-line doctors, nurses and other health workers had the greatest
clinical experience in diagnosing and treating SARS patients. Yet there was no
process in place to ensure that their voices and experience were heard.
At North York General, for example, before the events of May 23, 2003, some nurses,
doctors and other health workers worried that, despite what they were being told,
SARS had not gone away. The hospital felt, based on consultations with outside
experts, including Public Health, that the psychiatry patients and the family cluster of
illness in May were not SARS. Hospital officials believed in good faith that staff
concerns were unfounded and that they needed to convince staff that it was safe. What
angered health workers was that their concerns, which turned out to be well founded,
were dismissed, and the well-intentioned messages of the hospital were disconnected
from front-line staff concerns.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That effective processes and systems be established to provide a path
for communication and consultation with front-line staff.
•
That the health concerns of health workers be taken seriously, and
that in the spirit of the precautionary principle health workers be
made to feel safe, even if this means continuing with levels of heightened precautions that experts believe are no longer necessary.
Listening to Unions
Just as hospitals should listen more carefully to the concerns of nurses and other
front-line health workers, the Ministry of Health would be well advised to listen more
carefully to the reasonable concerns of health worker unions which have enormous
front-line experience in the actual problems of worker safety on the ground. Their
expertise is reflected in the thoughtful and detailed presentations by unions that
represent Ontario’s health workers, and in particular the joint work of the Ontario
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Nurses’ Association and the Ontario Public Service Employees Union. The problems
of worker safety have been explicitly recognized by Minister of Health George
Smitherman speaking to an audience of nurses in May 2005:
One of the things I was struck by … [was] the number of nurses that
work in environments, hospital environments perhaps more particularly,
that actually are unsafe … We have a lot of work to do on that.
It is important for Ministry officials to take this ministerial direction seriously. It is
important for Ministry officials to avoid any impression that the Ministry has
adopted an adversarial or dismissive attitude towards those who voice the legitimate
concerns of those at risk on the front lines.32
Surveillance
One of the most important systemic failures of SARS was the failure to quickly identify clusters of illness among staff and to convey that information to infection control
practitioners at affected hospitals and to those leading the fight against SARS. These
systemic failures prevented the timely identification of SARS cases at the Grace and
at North York General, the sites of the two largest nosocomial outbreaks.
Before May 23, 2003, when it appeared that SARS had been contained, there was no
system-wide surveillance in place to ensure that undetected cases were caught.
Responsibility for surveillance for undetected cases of SARS was left to individual
institutions and to front-line practitioners. Any system that might have identified
clusters of illness or death could have been helpful. However, surveillance standards at
individual hospitals in Ontario were insufficient and not mandated. Witnesses told
the Commission that such surveillance is possible only with a sufficiently resourced
infection control function.
The Commission therefore recommends:
32.
One example of this impression arose after a Ministry of Health official, responding to union
concerns that safety issues had been ignored in pandemic planning, did not address the issue on
the merits but dismissed the well-expressed union concerns by saying, “I am not sure we will ever
meet the expectations of organized labour regarding health and safety…” This comment led the
union to believe “that key bureaucrats in MOHLTC view occupational health and safety as a
partisan issue, with occupational health and safety proponents as their adversaries.”
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•
That appropriate surveillance standards be established, mandated and
funded in Ontario hospitals.
•
That special care be paid to identifying clusters of illness among staff
and to initiating immediate investigation.
•
That where suspicious clusters of illness are identified, this be
communicated to health workers, especially to those who might have
been in contact with sick staff, or have worked in the same areas of
the hospital.
•
When an outbreak appears to be waning of a difficult-to-diagnose
infectious disease like SARS, system-wide surveillance be implemented to ensure that undetected cases are identified.
•
Infection control functions in Ontario hospitals and in public
health be sufficiently resourced so that they could contribute to,
and participate in, system-wide surveillance when an outbreak
appears to be waning of a difficult-to-diagnose infectious disease
like SARS.
Infection Control
Many witnesses have told the Commission that, since SARS, infection control standards and practices have improved at hospitals affected by SARS. It will be important
to ensure that improvements occur across the health system. Witnesses voiced a
concern that as memories of the SARS outbreak fade, so will attention to infection
control. Part of that concern is over the lack of consistent system-wide policies on
visitor access at hospitals. They also told the Commission that many Ontario hospitals are in older buildings whose structure does not lend itself to modern infection
control practices.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Health ensure that all Ontario hospitals have
infection control personnel, resources and program components,
including surveillance, control and education, consistent with Canadian
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recommendations and best practices.33
•
That consistent and clear visitor policies be developed across the
health system to ensure that visitor access, while important in caring
for the ill, does not overcome infection control standards.
•
That the Ministry of Health and every health institution develop
consistent, safe and humane policies to lessen the impact of infectious
outbreaks on the vital priority for the sick to receive visitors, unless
medically dangerous.
•
That visitors be educated to their important role in keeping hospitals
safe, and to the need to respect limits on the number of visitors,
particularly where the illness is not serious or life-threatening.
•
That the Ministry of Health help hospitals to incorporate leading
practices in infection control standards into facility design and renovation.
Safety Culture in Health Workplaces
The heavy burden of disease that fell on nurses, doctors and other health workers
demonstrated the lack of a safety culture34 in the Ontario health system. A single
33.
“It’s critical that all hospitals have specific human resources, in the form of ICPs (Infection
Control Professionals) and support staff, for an effective infection prevention program,” says Dr.
[Richard] Zoutman. Such programmes must include surveillance (counting infections), control
(interventions to prevent them from occurring), and education components.
Source: Queen’s News Centre, “Canadian hospitals below standards for preventing infection,”
Tuesday, August 05, 2003, http://qnc.queensu.ca/story_loader.php?id=3f2fb55a816fc.
34.
A definition of safety culture suggested by the Health and Safety Commission in the U.K. is as
follows:
The safety culture of an organisation is the product of the individual and group values, attitudes, competencies and patterns of behaviour that determine the commitment to, and the
style and proficiency of, an organisation’s health and safety programmes. Organisations with
a positive safety culture are characterised by communications founded on mutual trust, by
shared perceptions of the importance of safety, and by confidence in the efficacy of preventative measures.
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event like the spread of SARS at the Grace was warning enough that a safety culture
was lacking. The fact that health workers continued to get sick in April and May after
the events at the Grace demonstrated the extent to which a safety culture was lacking.
Nothing better demonstrates the absence of a safety culture than the inability to fix
worker safety problems in a timely manner once they have been identified by a
tragedy like the Grace.
The Vancouver experience demonstrated the value of a safety culture in health workplaces. Expressions of this safety culture included the close cooperation and mutual
respect between infection control and worker safety, the emphasis on listening to
health workers, and the deployment of joint teams of infection control and worker
safety experts to Royal Columbian Hospital after a nurse contracted SARS.
In Ontario, infection control and worker safety disciplines generally operated as separate silos during SARS. Until this divide is bridged and infection control and worker
safety disciplines begin to actively and effectively cooperate, it will be difficult to
establish a strong safety culture in Ontario.
As a landmark study on worker safety in health care said:
… if the safety climate within healthcare was better and workers had
more confidence in their employers’ commitment to worker health and
A positive safety culture implies that the whole is more than the sum of the parts. The different
aspects interact together to give added effect in a collective commitment. In a negative safety
culture the opposite is the case, with the commitment of some individuals strangled by the cynicism of others. From various studies it is clear that certain factors appear to characterise organisations with a positive safety culture.
These factors include:
• The importance of leadership and the commitment of the chief executive
• The executive safety role of line management
• The involvement of all employees
• Effective communications and commonly understood and agreed goals
• Good organisational learning and responsiveness to change
• Manifest attention to workplace safety and health
• A questioning attitude and a rigorous and prudent approach by all individuals
Source: The Institution of Engineering and Technology, “IEE – Health and Safety Briefing 07 –
Safety Culture,” http://www.iee.org/Policy/Areas/Health/hsb07.cfm.
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safety, employees would have more confidence in the messages and directives they received during a crisis situation such as SARS. The relatively
low profile of occupational health and safety within healthcare is perhaps
best reflected in the observation that very few focus groups, aside from
those containing health and safety professionals, seemed to be aware of
occupational health and safety professionals at all. Tasks such as fit-testing of respirators often fell to infection control practitioners, not to occupational health and safety professionals (although this appears to vary
from facility to facility) as it would have in other industries.35
The study identified the following organizational factors that promote a safety
culture:
•
There is general agreement that the safety-related attitudes and
actions of management play an important role in creating a good or
bad safety climate.
•
Studies of safety program effectiveness in non-healthcare settings
have repeatedly shown that a positive or supportive safety climate is
an important contributing factor to good safety performance.
Specifically, it is known that as safe behaviours are adopted throughout an organization, increasing pressure is put on non-compliers to
“come in line.”
•
It has been shown that the safety climate has an important influence
on the transfer of training knowledge.36
While important research has been conducted on infection control standards,37
35.
36.
37.
Dr. Annalee Yassi and Dr. Elizabeth Bryce, “Protecting the faces of healthcare workers: knowledge gaps and research priorities for effective protection against occupationally-acquired respiratory infectious diseases” (Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare in B.C., April
30, 2004), p. 67.
Dr. Annalee Yassi and Dr. Elizabeth Bryce, “Protecting the faces of healthcare workers: knowledge gaps and research priorities for effective protection against occupationally-acquired respiratory infectious diseases” (Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare in B.C., April
30, 2004), pp. 32-3.
See Zoutman et al., “The state of infection surveillance and control.”
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worker safety experts have noted that similar research has not been undertaken in
occupational health and safety.38
The Commission therefore recommends:
38.
39.
•
That the Ministry of Labour use its enforcement and standardsetting activities, and the Ministry of Health its funding and oversight activities, to promote organizational factors that give rise to a
safety culture in health workplaces.
•
That the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health jointly
promote a safety culture in health workplaces that emphasizes close
cooperation and collaboration between infection control and worker
safety experts, and reflects the principles and practices of their respective disciplines.
•
That in preparation for the possibility of a future infectious disease
outbreak, the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health jointly
establish teams of trained and equipped infection control experts,
occupational physicians, occupational hygienists and Labour inspectors who could be rapidly deployed to sites of workplace outbreaks.
•
That occupational health and safety standards, including optimal
staffing levels for worker safety practitioners, be established, similar to
the SENIC standards for infection control.39
“Certainly more research on what levels or standards are needed to promote effectiveness in occupational health, similar to the SENIC studies for infection control, is needed.” Source: Dr.
Annalee Yassi and Dr. Elizabeth Bryce, “Protecting the faces of healthcare workers: knowledge
gaps and research priorities for effective protection against occupationally-acquired respiratory
infectious diseases” (Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare in B.C., April 30,
2004), p. 67.
The most important determinants of successful general nosocomial infection control programs in
hospitals have been understood since the mid-1980s when the Study on the Efficacy of
Nosocomial Infection Control (SENIC) was published. The following organizational factors
were found to be important in determining effective infection control and lower rates of nosocomial-transmitted disease: having one infection control practitioner per 250 acute care beds,
having at least one full-time physician interested in infection control, having an intensive
surveillance program for nosocomial diseases and having intensive control policies and procedures. However, in a recent survey of 172 hospitals in Canada, only about 60 per cent of hospitals had evidence of compliance for each of the SENIC factors. The number of institutions
who had all four factors was likely much less.
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•
That once occupational health and safety standards are established,
the Ministry of Health provide consistent and sustained funding and
strategic planning to ensure that these requirements are achieved, and
the Ministry of Labour ensure they are maintained through its
enforcement and monitoring functions.
•
That the best practices of worker safety disciplines and infection
control be reflected in hospital accreditation standards.
•
That additional resources be dedicated by the Ministry of Health for
the training and certification of worker safety experts, including occupational physicians and occupational hygienists.
•
That worker safety programs at health care institutions include training for workers, management, officers and directors on their roles and
responsibilities with regard to worker safety laws and regulations.
•
That the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Labour and
Ontario institutions that train health care professionals, establish
baseline standards on occupational health and safety and infection
prevention and control measures and procedures, to be incorporated
into the curricula of medical and nursing schools and schools for the
allied health professions in Ontario colleges and universities.
Regional Infection Control Networks
The Ministry of Health has helped to improve infection control standards in health
care by establishing Regional Infection Control Networks. To promote a safety
culture in health care, it will be important that these networks foster close cooperation
and collaboration between infection control and worker safety.
The Commission therefore recommends:
Source: Dr. Annalee Yassi and Dr. Elizabeth Bryce, “Protecting the faces of healthcare workers:
knowledge gaps and research priorities for effective protection against occupationally-acquired
respiratory infectious diseases” (Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare in B.C.,
April 30, 2004), p. 67.
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•
That Regional Infection Control Networks have, as integral
members, experts in occupational medicine and occupational hygiene,
and representatives of the Ministry of Labour.
•
That members of Regional Infection Control Networks be fully
educated in the requirements of the Occupational Health and Safety
Act, and its regulations.
•
That regional Infection Control Networks, in dealing with worker
safety issues, consult on an ongoing basis with the Ministry of
Labour, workplace parties and worker safety experts.
Role of the Ministry of Labour
Despite its legal mandate to protect workers, the Ministry of Labour was largely sidelined during SARS. It was not given a role in the SARS response commensurate with
its statutory duties. It was also not consulted before West Park Healthcare Centre’s
old tuberculosis unit was opened to accept sick health workers from the Grace, even
though its perspective would have been very germane to the decision. The outbreak at
the Seven Oaks Home for the Aged demonstrated that issues still remain unresolved
about the role of the Ministry of Labour during an infectious disease outbreak.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Labour have the lead responsibility for setting
and enforcing work safety policies, procedures and standards in the
health care sector, as it does in all workplaces.
•
That the Ministry of Health, as the Ministry that funds and oversees
the health care delivery system, not be placed in the position of acting
as an independent worker safety watchdog over its own system.
•
That the Ministry of Health have the lead responsibility for developing and implementing infection control measures in the health care
sector to protect patients, residents and/or clients.
•
That the Ministry of Labour and Ministry of Health develop protocols,
processes and procedures to ensure effective and active cooperation and
coordination where their respective worker safety and infection control
responsibilities overlap.
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•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, the Ministry of Labour
have a clearly defined decision-making role on worker safety issues in
a future Provincial Operations Centre, and that this role be clearly
communicated to all workplace parties.
•
That the role and authority of the Ministry of Labour be clearly
defined during a declared emergency. Under the Emergency
Management and Civil Protection Act, the Occupational Health and
Safety Act prevails, and, as such, the Ministry of Labour’s mandate to
communicate and enforce occupational health and safety standards
for workplaces under provincial jurisdiction will remain during an
emergency. How the designated lead ministry in any emergency will
interact with the Ministry of Labour, so that the Ministry of Labour
can continue to fulfill its mandate, should be established prior to an
emergency.
•
That in any future infectious disease crisis, the Ministry of Labour be
consulted when health facilities that had previously been decommissioned, such as West Park’s old tuberculosis unit, are reopened in
response to exigent circumstances.
•
That the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Labour work
together to establish an agreement and mechanism, including information technology systems, to share information related to outbreaks
of infectious diseases. Such information sharing should include information about Ontario’s health care facilities. The objective is to
ensure compliance with the reporting of occupational illnesses to the
Ministry of Labour under the Occupational Health and Safety Act, and
to ensure that the Ministry of Labour has at its disposal all relevant
information to appropriately address outbreaks of infectious diseases
in health care and other workplaces.
•
That the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Labour work
together to establish integrated enforcement strategies to improve
compliance with occupational health and safety legislation and with
legislation administered by the Ministry of Health.
•
That the Ministry of Health establish a process, similar to the one
available under the Occupational Health and Safety Act, to hold directors
and officers of health care organizations accountable for compliance
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with provincial legislation. This may be accomplished by performance
specifications in contracts or service agreements that the Local Health
Integration Networks will establish with health care organizations.
The Ministry of Labour and the 1984 Agreement
During SARS, the Ministry of Labour deferred its worker safety responsibilities to
the health sector, believing the health sector had the expertise and capabilities to
protect workers in a manner that was consistent with provincial laws and regulations.
It did this, in part, because of a 1984 Memorandum of Understanding with the
Ministry of Health that was unauthorized by statute, unclear, not disseminated to
interested parties like the unions, and of questionable legal authority to the extent that
it might require ministry personnel to fetter their discretion and so fail to fulfill their
duties in workplaces affected by infectious diseases.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the 1984 agreement between the Ministry of Health and the
Ministry of Labour be replaced by an agreement that ensures that the
Ministry of Labour, in consultation and cooperation with the
Ministry of Health, take the lead in investigating infectious disease
outbreaks that affect workers in a workplace.
•
That the existence of any agreement setting out the respective roles
and responsibilities of the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of
Health in a public health emergency be fully communicated to
unions, employers, Joint Health and Safety Committees and other
workplace parties.
Ministry of Labour Investigations and Prosecutions
When the Ministry of Labour decided not to lay any charges in connection with the
deaths of Tecla Lin, Nelia Laroza and Dr. Nestor Yanga it did not disclose the reasons
for doing so.
After SARS, critical injury and occupational illness investigations were begun very
late in the one-year window for instituting prosecutions, and investigators had a very
limited period to complete their work.
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The Commission therefore recommends:
•
Legislative amendments and policies in relation to the waiver of potential Crown privilege claims, such that in such cases where charges do
not result from Ministry of Labour and other investigations of deaths
and critical injuries in health workplaces, the results of the investigation
and the reasons for the decision not to prosecute be made public.
•
That Ministry of Labour investigations into critical injuries and occupational illnesses arising from a disaster of the magnitude of SARS be
commenced and completed expeditiously.
•
That a review be undertaken of section 69 of the Occupational Health
and Safety Act, as to whether the limit on the institution of a prosecution to no more than one year after the last act or default occurred be
amended.
Ministry of Labour Proactive Inspections
For reasons set out in this report, the Ministry of Labour did not conduct any proactive inspections of SARS hospitals during virtually all the outbreak. Labour’s
approach was vastly different from what occurred in British Columbia, where the
workplace regulator began proactive inspections in early April 2003 and paid special
regulatory attention to a hospital where a nurse contracted SARS. This was a missed
opportunity in Ontario, although we will never know what impact that might have
had on the SARS response.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That in any future infectious disease outbreak, the Ministry of Labour
take a proactive approach throughout the outbreak to ensure that
health workers are protected in a manner that is consistent with
worker safety laws, regulations, guidelines and best practices.
•
That in any future infectious disease outbreak, the Ministry of
Labour’s proactive approach be clearly communicated to all workplace
parties, including the Ministry of Health, public health units, employers, workers’ representatives and Joint Health and Safety Committees.
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That in preparation for the possibility of a future infectious disease
outbreak, the Ministry of Labour prepare effective operational plans
for playing a proactive role, including establishing and training teams
of occupational physicians, hygienists and inspectors to spearhead any
proactive effort.
Investigations Led by the Ministry of Health
During SARS, a team from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) was invited
by the province to investigate the incident at Sunnybrook on April 13, 2003, when
nine health workers were infected. Because of systemic failings, no one thought to
invite the Ministry of Labour to participate, or to advise it that such an investigation
was taking place. Similarly, after the Seven Oaks outbreak of legionellosis in the fall
of 2005, the Ministry of Labour was not invited to participate in a Ministry of Health
investigation into the response to the outbreak. In addition, the Seven Oaks investigation also would have benefited from the inclusion of worker safety experts.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Labour play an integral role in any future
Ministry of Health investigation into an infectious outbreak where
workers were infected, such as occurred at Sunnybrook and Seven
Oaks.
•
That the Ministry of Labour be given the responsibility for ensuring
that any worker safety–related findings in any future Ministry of
Health investigation be consistent with worker safety laws and principles.
•
That any investigation into an infectious outbreak where workers
were infected, such as the investigations at Sunnybrook and Seven
Oaks, include experts in occupational hygiene and other worker safety
disciplines.
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Ministry of Labour Physician Resources
Prior to SARS, the Ministry of Labour’s complement of inspectors and physicians
had been sharply reduced. SARS also revealed that many Ministry of Labour inspectors lacked sufficient health care–related training. Since SARS, the Ministry of
Labour has hired additional inspectors, including some dedicated to the health care
sector, and increased its health care–related staff training. But it has not increased its
occupational physician cadre, which had once had province-wide coverage but is now
concentrated in Toronto.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the Ministry of Labour expand its internal resources of occupational physicians and ensure that their capabilities are available
province-wide.
Worker Safety Laws and Regulations
The evidence reveals widespread, persistent and ingrained failures by the health
system to understand and comply with Ontario’s safety laws including the
Occupational Health and Safety Act and related regulations. Ontario’s worker safety
laws are based on the Internal Responsibility System.40 SARS revealed an important
structural problem when implementing the Internal Responsibility System in the
health care sector: the fact that physicians often make worker safety decisions even
though they may not be hospital employees.
The Commission therefore recommends:
40.
The Ministry of Labour described the Internal Responsibility System as follows:
Employers, workers and others in the workplace share the responsibility for occupational
health and safety. Each party is responsible to act to the extent of the authority that they have
in the workplace. This concept of the internal responsibility system is based on the principle
that the workplace parties themselves are in the best position to identify health and safety
problems and to develop solutions. This concept emerged from the Royal Commission into
health and safety in mines in Ontario in 1976 and was soon adopted as the basis of the new
Occupational Health and Safety Act in 1978.
Source: Ministry of Labour, presentation to the SARS Commission, November 17, 2003, p. 6.
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•
Worker safety in hospitals and other health care institutions requires
reasonable legislative measures to include all physicians within the
worker safety regime without interfering with the essential independence of physicians and without making them hospital employees.
Such legislative measures may need to include not only the
Occupational Health and Safety Act but also those statutes that govern
the administration of health care institutions and the medical profession. It would be presumptuous for the Commission to recommend a
prescriptive solution at this time. That task will require a good measure of consultation and a thorough analysis of the complex professional and statutory framework within which doctors work in health
care institutions. The Commission recommends the amendment of
worker safety, health care, and professional legislation to ensure that
physicians who affect health worker safety are not excluded from the
legislative regime that protects health workers. Because the prescriptive solution will require consultation and analysis and time and
patience, it is essential to start now.
•
That the Ministry of Labour conduct a meaningful review of the
Occupational Health and Safety Act and related regulations in consultation with workplace parties and worker safety experts to examine how
the Internal Responsibility System can better be implemented in the
unique conditions of the health care system.
•
That the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health work
together to harmonize requirements addressing health and safety in
legislation and/or regulations administered by both ministries, which
may overlap or conflict.
•
That the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Health work
together to review possible statutory or regulatory amendments to
enhance the process for reporting, tracking and sharing of information, and removal of any barriers to information sharing related to
outbreaks of infectious disease.
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Joint Health and Safety Committees
The evidence reveals that Joint Health and Safety Committees, a fundamental
component of Ontario’s worker safety regime, were often sidelined during SARS.
The Commission therefore recommends:.
•
That in any future infectious disease outbreak, the emergency
response ensure the involvement of Joint Health and Safety
Committees in a manner consistent with their statutory role in keeping workplaces safe.
•
That worker safety programs at health care institutions include training for senior management on their roles and responsibilities with
regard to Joint Health and Safety Committees.
•
That management and worker representatives on Joint Health and
Safety Committees be provided with appropriate training and sufficient time from their other duties to fulfill their JHSC obligations in
a meaningful way, especially during public health crises.
Ontario Agency for Health Protection and
Promotion, and Worker Safety
On June 22, 2004, Health Minister George Smitherman released a three-year public
health action plan called Operation Health Protection. It indicated that the Ontario
Health Protection and Promotion Agency and its new laboratory would begin operations in the 2006/7 fiscal year.41 It will be important for the Agency to play an active
role in worker safety issues.
41.
The action plan said:
An Agency Implementation Task Force is being struck to provide technical advice on the
development and implementation of the Agency. Together with the advice of international
and national experts, the Ministry will establish the Agency by 2006/07.
Source: Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Operation Health Protection: An Action Plan to
Prevent Threats to our Health and to Promote a Healthy Ontario ( June 22, 2004), p. 23.
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The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That just as NIOSH, the main U.S. federal agency responsible for
worker safety research and investigation,42 is part of the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC), so the Ontario Agency for Health
Protection and Promotion should have a well-resourced, integrated
section that is focused on worker safety research and investigation,
and on integrating worker safety and infection control.
•
That any section of the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and
Promotion involved in worker safety have, as integral members,
experts in occupational medicine and occupational hygiene, and
representatives of the Ministry of Labour, and consult on an ongoing
basis with workplace parties.
•
That the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion serve
as a model for bridging the two solitudes of infection control and
worker safety.
•
That the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion
ensure that it become a centre of excellence for both infection control
and occupational health and safety.
•
That the mandate of the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and
Promotion include research related to evaluating the modes of transmission of febrile respiratory illnesses and the risk to health workers.
42. The duties of NIOSH (the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health) include:
• Investigating potentially hazardous working conditions as requested by employers or
employees.
• Evaluating hazards in the workplace, ranging from chemicals to machinery.
• Creating and disseminating methods for preventing disease, injury, and disability.
• Conducting research and providing scientifically valid recommendations for protecting
workers.
• Providing education and training to individuals preparing for or actively working in the
field of occupational safety and health.
See: http://www.er.doe.gov/ober/humsubj/appendix_b.pdf7.
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Naylor Report, pp. 52-5.
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This research should also identify the hierarchy of control measures
required to protect the health and safety of workers caring for patients
with the respiratory illnesses.
Pandemic Planning
As occurred during SARS, there is now a debate over how influenza is spread and
how health workers should be protected during a pandemic. Some experts believe
influenza is mostly droplet-spread and surgical masks would be sufficient protection
for health workers. Others believe that airborne transmission is a possible means of
spreading influenza, and health workers should, as a result, wear fit-tested N95 respirators when caring for people suffering from a pandemic flu virus. The Commission is
not in a position to wade into this evolving scientific debate. However, it is worth
noting how the CDC has used the precautionary principle in addressing this issue.
The CDC is saying, in effect, we don’t know enough about how a pandemic influenza
might be spread, so it’s better to be safe than sorry. It is the kind of precautionary
approach all pandemic planners should carefully consider.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
That the precautionary principle guide the development of pandemicrelated worker safety policies, practices, procedures and guidelines.
•
That in the development and implementation of the Ontario
pandemic plan, the Ministry of Labour have responsibility for, and
oversight over, all worker safety policies, practices, procedures and
guidelines.
•
That the Ministry of Labour ensure that the Internal Responsibility
System and Joint Health and Safety Committees play a meaningful
role in a pandemic response.
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Pre-Planned Emergency Response Regarding Funerals
The families of SARS victims often were unable to have a traditional funeral. In some
cases, funeral visitations were forbidden, or restricted. Mourners had to stand off at a
distance at one burial. For some, there was no closure. Learning from this will be
important in the event of another public health crisis like SARS, or if there is a flu
pandemic.
The Commission therefore recommends:
•
A pre-planned response involving the funeral industry, the Ministry of
Health, public health, the hospital community, Emergency Measures
Ontario and the office of the Chief Coroner, supported by agreed policies, procedures, protocols, memoranda of understanding and tabletop
drill exercises to prevent the problems that arose during SARS.
Emergency Legislation
Ontario has passed into law the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act, to fill
the emergency power vacuum that existed at the time of SARS. It is understandable
that the government, in its determination to have some kind of law in place before the
next emergency struck, did not stop to address all the specific emergency legislation
problems noted in detail in the hundred pages of Chapter 11 of the Commission’s
second interim report of April 5, 2005. These problems are serious but easily remedied now. They include:
•
The overreaching power to suspend the Habeas Corpus Act, the
Elections Act, the Legislative Assembly Act, and other constitutional
foundations of ordered liberty under law.
•
The power to lock up journalists without trial for violating gag orders.
•
The failure to blueprint compensation for those who really need it,
such as those quarantined, medical workers deprived of their livelihood and those whose jobs are disrupted.
•
The failure to protect medical decisions of the Chief Medical Officer
of Health from Emergency Commissioner encroachment.
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•
The failure to carry out clause-by-clause legal and constitutional
scrutiny and obtain a detailed bill of health from the Attorney
General.
•
The confusion between the emergency powers and the regular Health
Protection and Promotion Act powers.
It is understandable that the government in its desire to get the emergency legislation
into place before the next disaster did not pause to address and to answer in detail the
flaws referred to in the Commission’s April 2005 report, flaws which are serious but
easily remedied. The government has taken no public position in respect of the
detailed flaws noted by the Commission. It is not as if the unimplemented recommendations have been considered and rejected for publicly stated reasons. The unimplemented recommendations have simply not been addressed publicly. The problems
that have not been addressed and answered are noted in the chart at the end of this
section.
The problem is not with the good intentions of those who will administer and exercise the emergency powers. The problem is that these awesome powers represent a
profound change in our legal structure and raise issues that need to be addressed
further in this statute that so fundamentally alters our system of government by law.
Extraordinary powers like those in the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act
are inherently dangerous and require now the sober second thought and detailed legal
clause-by-clause review and publicly stated justification which they did not explicitly
receive before.
Ontario’s emergency legislation brings to mind what President Lyndon Johnson said
about the potential danger of all laws:
You do not examine legislation in the light of the benefits it will convey if
properly administered, but in the light of the wrongs it would do and the
harms it would cause if improperly administered.
The Commission recommends the review and amendment of the emergency legislation in accordance with the unimplemented recommendations in Chapter 11 of the
Commission’s April 2005 second interim report.
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Emergency Recommendations
Topic
Recommendation
Status
Encourage
Compliance
• Include basic blueprint for compensa- Not yet implemented
tion for loss caused by emergency
powers, for example, quarantine wage
loss.
Prevent Prepare
Cooperate
• Provide for integration of emergency
Not yet implemented
plans, and include explicit requirement
that emergency plans establish clear allocations of powers and lines of authority.
Clarify Overlap
with Existing
Public Health
Powers
• Clarify the relationship between the
emergency powers conferred by this
Bill and the powers conferred by the
HPPA.
Not yet implemented
Primacy of
CMOH
• Recognize explicitly the primary
authority of CMOH in respect of the
public health aspects of emergencies.
Not yet implemented
Emergency
Commissioner
Must Consult
CMOH
• Require consultative exercise of
powers as between the CMO and the
CEM.
Not yet implemented
Emergency
Powers
• Attorney General to conduct detailed
clause-by-clause review of each
proposed power for viability against
legal and constitutional challenges.
Not yet implemented
• Clarify whether the Bill incorporates
the specific public health emergency
powers listed in Commission’s second
interim report.
Not yet implemented
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Recommendations
• No power of compulsory immuniza- Accepted
tion before evidence as to its efficacy
is available.
Not yet implemented
• Review compulsory immunization
legal issues to develop procedures that
encourage immunization of health
workers and public, akin to schoolchild immunization system
Property Seizure
Power to
Override
All Other Laws
The Information
Override
Declaration
Standard
• Clarify whether the Bill mandates the Accepted
seizure or expropriation of property.
• Subject each proposed power to a
thorough practical, legal, and policy
analysis prior to adoption.
Not yet implemented
• Where such analysis is not possible
before enactment, impose a sunset
period of no more than 2 years on the
proposed power.
Not yet implemented
• Clarify whether the Bill’s purported
override of other laws and legal rights
affects collective agreements.
Not yet implemented
• Insulate fundamental statutes from
the Override
Not yet implemented
• Reposition the Override to highlight
its importance.
Not yet implemented
• Review constitutional legitimacy of
the Override.
Not yet implemented
• Clarify the scope of the government’s
power to compel the disclosure of
information.
• Amend the standard applicable to the
declaration of emergencies so as to
rely on the reasonable perception of
the decision-maker.
Not yet implemented
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• Amend the standard applicable to the
making of emergency orders so as to
rely on the reasonable perception of
the decision-maker.
Accepted
• Ensure there is no unintended confer- Not yet implemented
Power to
ral of powers.
Implement
Emergency Plans
Access to Courts
• Provide for access to legal process
during emergencies.
Not yet implemented
Basket Power
• Incorporate an objective reasonableness standard into the language
governing the use of this power.
Not yet implemented
Occupational
Health and
Safety
• Require emergency plans to provide
for advance consideration of potential
OHS issues.
Not yet implemented
Concurrent
Powers
• Provide that conferral of new emergency powers does not derogate from
existing powers.
Accepted
Liability Shield
• Provide protection from liability for
acts which are necessitated by an
emergency and which are authorized
by other statutes but not the EMA –
and vice versa.
Not yet implemented
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